THE NEBRASKA ADVERTISER W. W. nANOKIM, I'abttihitr. NEMAHA, NEBRASKA. THE STONE IN THE ROAD. Long tlmo f?o thor lived a king Known to l)o tfood and wIbo; IIu taught hid people laziness In all forms to desplfte. "For the ticat thln of life," mM ho, "Ood xlve to thoo who work; IJnd lurk comes lint by mnilne8, To those who love to hlrk" Itlitht In tho middle of tho road, CIoso by hi palace fair, lie placed a atone, and watched to jco Tho people pnlnff there. Quite early In tho morning carno A farmer, with hi corn. Drawn by a yoko of onttn "Ha As sure as you are born," lie crlod, In great disgust, "the king I fas lazy subjects hero. Now t must drive my cart one sld And upset, too, I fear!" He never thought to roll the stone Hlmsolf. A soldier gay, IWIth it long feather In hl hat, Now marched across the way; A merry song he sung, but as He hold his hoad so high, He stumbled o'er the stone and In Tho dust was forced to He. "Ah! silly drones, yo country folks," He Mtormod "your sense Is small, To leave sueh stones where travelers Are almost mire to fall!" An hour later, merchants, six, Hound for a village fair, Came down the road and loudly blamed Tho folks who loft It there. And so for three long wcoks or more, In everybody's way, That Mtone, untouched by nnyono, Aa an obstruction lay. Then tho great king a message sent To people far and noar, JJIddlng them by his palace, on A certain day; appear. "My friends, 'twas I who placed thin atone That In your wny hns stood, To seo," the king said, "which of you Loved most his neighbor's good," Ho stooped and quickly rolled asldo Tho stone a box was there "For him who lifts this stone," they read, In lotterH largo and fair. Out fell a ring and twonty coins Of gold "This maxim true Now take to heart," quoth our good king: "Strlvo with your might to do The work that right before you llos; Don't go around tho stone, Or scold your neighbor, when the fault Hosts but with you alone." -Ulzzlo do Armond, In Ohio Farmer. el,ttf'f8,i,fP5'VfP5,rPi,rCl,r5,fff Tom Tedona j jy By S. Rhott Roman. ; a-'?l,VB-fj.?.v?).?j.7,''?i5 TOXI line been altar boy now for nearly six months, and, in conse quence, his position had been greatly improved, hot only with the community nt. large, butnmong the nigged urchins hwurhiing around Ducntur and Old 2-uvco xtruulti. Even Merc Felix, the old bottle wom an on St. Anthony's alley, was less rancorous In her attacks, more cau tions how she struck at him when he "passed by, and not quite so viuious in lier abiise of his (lend mother. Ton! sat on the front steps of the cathedral, and looked out at the beau tiful, (lowering square In. front; at the puling tints of the evening sky; the ta pering masts and rigging and red fun nel's of the ships lined up along the wharves beyond where the trallleof the levee front rolled in a distant, ceaseless hunt and rumble; and at the curling tsmokc of a. locomotive as it switched Mime heavy freight trains back and forth, with grumbling persistency. For all seemed to Ton! a revelation ' something lie had never noted before. And yet the MI years of his young, hut troublesome life had been spent right here, on the levee, in the narrow streets and crowded alleyways adjoin ing and around the old cathedral and Jackson square, In which he used to steal, to throw stones a't the sparrows, when no one was looking. Ton! sat idly, his chin resting in the palms of his hands, his elbows on his knees, mid he pondered if he were really Ton! Tedona, the vagrant and imp of yore. The Ishmaeltte, whoso code of morals had been summed up in the words: "Po not be found out;" whose agile lingers were wont to steal anything available, and whose sharp .wits were for sale to the highest bidder for any nefarious job, to be executed in mysterious.-courtyards and under the shad ows of night, in those days not long .ago, before Mere Laurent had taken him in. For .Tonl's -bold intrepidity, his cool .daring and matchless elYroiUery had made him a tool of rare value for the reckless, turbulent, criminal popula tion mound the wharves, and his small, fiharp features, brilliaut dark eyes and short, curling black hair hnd become well known to the local police, as was li!s mocking insolence nnd his clever ness in getting outof scrapes where one less quick-.witted would have been cor nered and trapped. Ton! seemed hardly to recognize hlm solf. , Jlow was !t he had refused, fiercely and at last with bhnvs, to accompany that lawless band of which he had erst while been chief, gathered that evening for n raid long meditated on old Me lon, the butcher's, premises, out by the barracks? Melon,, who was cor dially hated by all the rabble of the market? It was not through fear of the stout old Gascon (ii his s.t.( 1 , loni would mock and with gi '' at both; nor fear of hi bi-r-tiiouthrd 'Ior. Halt! Ton! knw a s ra specific to quell the noisy blinder ' t a watchdog, whether bloodhound or lull pup. It wits not hrcittiMt Toni hesitated to appropriate lleiou'g fruit and vegeta ble. War hnd waged too long and fiercely between the two factions (Tout's band and Melon, the close-listed, brutal butcher) for hlrn to look upon the destroying of his enemy ns anything but a fair reprisal of war. And when, with hooting and re proaches, the boys scurried oh" down Chartres street nnd left him alone on the church steps. Tonl's desire to take part in the expedition was so great tluit he had nil but shouted to them to stop mid wait for him. Milt the cnthed rnl bell hnd chimed the hour, nud Toni (mused, remembering I'ere Laurent's words: "Wait for me on the stepn, tnons Ills, and I will take you with me to hear some music some violin music which Father Charles will piny fop us." And in passing by Mere Laurent had placed his hand on Toni's rough, tnnglcd curls witii a gesture of protection and was it affection'.' At the thought, Tonl's rich Italian blood surged up, coloring the dark olive of his eherks, and his eyes, which were watching the gathering clouds being driven up by a summer storm from ncross the gulf, shone like two luminous stars. No, not to please a Heavenly Fnther. remote nnd unknown, one who hnd not watched over those dark and un happy days from which lie had emerged, would Toni strive to follow the narrow path jointed out to him by Mere Laurent. That path, which excluded passion, vengeance and curses. Ill-will and theft, nnd the paying buck of evil for evil, his long-cherished dream, which was to square up those old accounts of his op pressed childhood, and settle, the debt with compound interest he owed those I who had so harshly treated him." Loni would sit and plan how he would wipe out the old scores when he would be brawny and tall and power ful, like tlit; sailors on the goclettesand charcoal boats moored in the Old Masin. Hut If lie was .to renounce the keen pleasure over which he had so gloated, vengeance on Mere Feljx and others, it was only to please Merc Laurent, to bring a smile to his dim. kind eyes, mid to hear him say: "mons Ills." those words which, sinking deep, made Toni's heart swell with a passionate love and pride. . No, it was not for the sake of doing right, lit the dictate of thnt remote God in- Heaven. . It was for love of I'ere Laurent.' Ton! Tedona had been unwittingly the cause of contention and reproach in Father Laurent's quiet home, the presbytere by the cafhedrnl. Old Madame Jean, hts housekeeper, hnd raised her hands in hoby horror ami her voice in strong protest when told to prepare a cot in the wing room forToni, (he vagabond, who led all the pranks and villainies committed by the gamins of the levee. It was impossible that I'ere Laurent would think seriously of trying to reform so notorious a young villain! ' ''And to bring htm into the presby tere! That quiet, orderly twos! "It was impoMiibJe! Why. in a week's time she, Madame Jena, would not hare .'! chick or a hen left in the Jr&, nor would Father Laurent have onoif thoee beautifulsilrerspoonH presented to him in gratitude by It la congregation.' "Toni Tedona was a brigand, ami it was easy xo foretell what would 6e hi ending." Hut I'ere Laurent had smiled ' hi alow, 'quiet smile, of companionate re proof, which Madame Jean herself mmI was like a ray of diin light from Heaven, and reminding her of the char ity of Him who had said to the thief; "Meet me in paradise," had persisted that Toni, the reprobate, he made wel come under his roof. "The boy i brave, and he liven not 'who can as.-rt that there is only eri in bim: He is yomigand.'ha been hard ly treated. Hi eyes are rearles and true and I will trust htm." So Toni was brought to the presby tere. It had buen hard work for Mere Laurent to implant into his wild and passionate nature the seeds of those. traditions and virtues which guide the Christian world, but there was tasefna tlon In the work, and he hail persisted. And soon Mere Laurent realized th magic of those two words "my .-on," and their effect upon Toni to quell his burst of passion when troubled and worried by the men on the levee for whom he worked, word, which would bring tears of repentance to his eyes. So Mere Laurent skillfully and ' pa tiently tended the wild plant he had plqeked from the poisonous duiifrhill of the street,' nud watched with prayerful delight its. gradual unfolding into a thing of beautiful growth.- "You think you hae tamed him, Mere? You wait mid see! One of these days Toni will blaze out in a fit of fury, iiiiu we win iitj assassinated!" instated Madame Jean. ' . ' Hut i'ere Laurent only toughed amusedly, if a little sadly. It had been at Toni's own-request that he had taken him as altar boy some six, months ago, marveling that he should wis-h It. Altar boy! Toni Tixlonn altar hoy! When the news spread abroad down the levee, among those r. t is compan ions', formerly led b Iiru to the com mission of deeds which wuld not bear the light of day, and whi ii an individ uality of interests nlne kept hidden away from the scrutiny f the police, how they yelled and shunted : derisively and mocked nt the fane And as Toni snt that evening on the Btcis of tlie cathedral in the waning tight, he cllnuhed his teth hard to keep down the rage in h heart at the ' recollection of the nan es they had cnlled him, nnd he realized full well that it was through a birnlnggrutltude to Mere Laurent, a lo- and reverence beyond the power of urds or expres sion for the noble. v "ite-haired old priest, who had drawn him back from the pit of darkness and crime into which he was plunging, which hnd niiule him ask to bo taken to serve mns as altar boy, not from any piety or love of re ligion. When with reverence and solemn voice, with bowed heml tnd closed eyes Merc' Laurent repented .iloud the serv ice. "Sunctus! Sanctum' Sanctus!" the bell tinkled and a hn-h fell 'over the church, Toni's gaze fill with an un speakable love on one who was an earthly and heavenly father to him. So, sitting on the cathedraF steps and waiting to accompanv Mere Laurent to hear the music of Mendelssohn and Hach which Father (hnrles played so well on his violin; Toni Tedona look ing up at the evening sky and the sen tinel stars, which smiled back at him. felt a great yettrnin:: come over him. to deserve the name given, with so noble a generosity, nnd to be indeed a worthy son to thnt saint on earth, a son upon whom no reproach would ever gather in years to come, no evil deed ever cling. The wind blew blustering and light clouds began to obscure the deep blue of the sky and the radiance of the stars. "Are you there, Toni?" said Mere Lau rent's gentle voice. "I was detained by n visit to a sick child. Alious, mon tils. Come. We will cross the river and go to hear rather Charles music for a little while." Springing up with a glad joy in his eyes as Mere Laurent placed a frail, withered hand on his shoulder, Ton! and his friend the priest passed down tiie steps, across the street, and into the square, where the rising wind was tossing the scents of the (lowers about them, out to the crowded levee, to take the ferry boat, pulling its way across the broad, winding river. I'ere Laurent's talk was of the dedi cation to the church of their rcsplend .ent genius by the old German masters, Sehaitian Hach, Handel and others, and, wrapt in his subject, he threaded .his way abstractedly among tho heavy belated Moats, market carts and back ing and twisting trains, which cross and recross on the levee front. Toni went slowly by his side, and, glancing up, thought that the stars smiled npprovingly. How was it? None could say. The darkening light of the evening must have obscured the distance, and fitful gusts of wind blew clouds of fine white dust in their faces. Mere Laurent, brought to sudden consciousness of where they were, paused, as a heavy engine backed rap idly down upon them. With an exclamation he stretched to stize, Toni's hand and attempted to erosM. not heeding the boy's imploring effort .to detain him. There weTe shouts of .warning and the thunder of an engine. Then, with one wild cry: "I'adre!" Toni sprang forward, caught and tore him back; filing him to one side, while wild cries arose from the engineer and trainmen around, saving Mudre Laurent, but go-; ing himself to an awful fate. "Mrni fils! mon fils!" wailed the gray-haired- priest in anguish, wringing his hand. Ton! T-dona toy at the foot of the altar. His face serene nnd smiling, was nn marred and over his shattered body a dark cloth had been drawn. Ta pers burned around the compassionate face of the Christ crucified, and silence reigned in the cathedral. I'ere Laurent knelt, nud, gazing at the young and beautiful face, so grand ly chhvded by death, alow tears fell orer his withered cheeks. Massing his hand over the dark curling hair with a tender gesture of lave, he whispered softly: "Mon fils! oh, mon fiU!' N. O. Times-Democrat. OrnH .SiircnMin. "f know- the pumpkin pie was rather thin tf to filling." saidfhe landlady, al most crying; "but I don't think he had aay righ.t to ay what he did." ''What did he say?" asked the second table boarder. "Ht: asked me if I didn't think that the pin crust would be improved if it hnd another coating of yellow paint." What-to-Kat. ' .Soiiirtlilnt; Wrontr. . Syhia What's the matter? You look as if you had ost your best (rlend, Maude I went to see a fortune tell er yesterday, and she told me f was go ing to marry a tall, (Jark man. The only rich fellow I kiif,w is dumpy and ha's red hair. Stray Ktoriert. TALK ABOUT INDIANS They Are Not Dying Out as Fast as Is Generally Supposed. How They Are Dlvlilrd Amoni; die Mitten nnd 'I'eri'ilorle Legend of the Origin of the Cher okee Alphuhot. Special Washington Letter. ' Our Indian brethren mny not have aa much room in which to roam as in the days when William Menn sold them a gold brick under ("lie wide spreading branches of an elm that once cast un umbrageous shadow over a small por tion of Fishtown, but they are almost as numerically strong as they were more than half a century ago. Figures demonstrate the truthfulness of this statement. A special Indian census, that forms a part of the last general census, gives the Indian population in this country as 3So,4(tt, of whom, how- .Sa6sVjH ' LMw-- 0 -Ji . u N.V .! : A CLUSTER OF INDIAN HOMES. ever, only 1S.417 nre returned as In dians, the remainder being those who are in various ways affiliated with the aborigines. Tire Indian population of the United States is officially recordud since ITS!), and up tc-lSOO, by the follow ing figures: tj?? Estimate of tho secretary of war Tfi.OW ""EKtlmate of Gilbert Imlay.. 60.CXI0 JS22 Report of Jeileiliah .Morse on In dian affairs 171.417 l"!2.i Report of the secretary of war..129,3'".fi 1S20 Report of the secretary of war. .312,930 1S32 Estimate of Samuel J. Drake 293,933 1S34 Report of tho secretary of war.. .312,1110 lisob Report of the superintendent of Indian affairs : 2J3.4BI 1S37 Report of the superintendent of Indian affairs 302.49S I'M Report of H. R. Schoolcraft 3SS.229 1Su3 Report of tho United States cqn- . sua. 18M 400.761 ISM) Report of the United States cen- , sjis 339,421 1S(.. Report of Hon. N. G. Taylor (ex clusive of citizen Indians) 30C.92". 1S70 Report of tho United States cen sus ...,f 313,712 ISS0 Report of United States census and Insllan ottlce -. COrt.MI 1S90 Report of United States census.. 219.273 Those' figures certainly contain a surprise fpr you. From them you learn that "Moor Lo" is not being wiped from the face of the earth as rapidly as many of you imagine. Why, even the names of the principal tribes, as recognized by the laws of the United States, furnish n tabic surprising in its amplitude. It contains these titles: nll In KiiHtla. The salt product Of the Hacbmqt di.s triot, Uus'.sin, increases yearly, last year output being 300,000. toua. Apache Arapahoo Arickareo HUckfeet Rannock Rrule Comancho Cheyenne Chickasaw Chippewa Choctaw Columbia Colville Creek Crow C't'sen and Pralrlo Sioux Otter Tail Ottawa Pillager Pawnee Pottawatomie Peoria Plankeshaw Pembina Ponca Pluto Qtiupaw Quinaelt Oulllehiite Turtle Mountain ronKawa Pottawatomie Carlos band, Flat head Caytise Cherokee Coeur d'Aleno CaJ'.spcr Diu ware D'Wamish K'athRd Gros Ventre' Hualapal Iowa Toseph's Band Kiowa Kaw . . Kansas Tvlckapoo Ka3kaskla Klamath Mnlol Miariil . . Mar.dan Modoc Malcah Mnnomonoe Murji'1 .Mez rerce Sac and Fox of tho .vitssissippi Sac and Fox of the Missouri Seminole Seneca, and Seneca of New York Shawnen and Eastern and Absentee Shoshono and Ran nock Six- Nations of New York Santee Sioux Sioux, Yankton tribe Phefpeater Sheblt S'Klallam SittPton Sioux Spokane t'tes Umatilla Wlnnebat-OKhlsh w Innebagoo W'ea Wichita Walla Walla w yandotte and Arannhn Navajo eyenno Northern Cheyenne Wahpeton Slouv and Arapaho Northern Chey Osaj;e Otoe and Mls.scirla The tribes mentioned are divided numerically among, the states and terri tories that form the great American re public, as follows: Nebraska -n.MS Nevada ir,7 New Mexico.... fi.-cm w York 5.31S North Purollnn. North Dakota.. 7.9S0 onio is Oklahoma 13.1H7 Oreson 3,713 Pennsylvania .. 9S South Dakota ..19,072 Texas i Utah ......;..'... 2.MS WashinKton'.... 7,."2i; Wisconsin ii,09S Wyoming '..-. 1.S01 figures. 'may have given, you-new thoughts about the. orig inal .owners' of American sui-J. Another singular condition' concerning them' U that among all of the nations that compose the Indian tribes only one- the Cherokee has a written-or print ed kingunge, although' from 'the tim'e Columbus." first set his foot upon the fruitful ground that we now till' there havebeen discovered 750 different lan guages or 'dialects', spok'ca by an equal Alabama 3S1 Arizona 2S,4txi Arkansas 32 California 5,107 Colorado 9SS Idaho 4,0fi4 Illinois 1 Indian Terrfry. 51,279 , Iowa 397 Kansas 0-15 Louisiana . 1 Massachusetts . '" 4 Michlsran ...!... l Minnesota .:.... S.20S Ml.s.ourl 1 Montana' 10.24U. Thesv fact nnd number of Inuum nations. VWiilc we who use the English tongue employ only 2G letters to give it expression,, the Cherokees find 87 requisite for the. voicing of their thoughts. Through this . condition of culture, however, tlie Cherokees have become the wealthiest and most Intelligent of all Indians. The story of the birth of their alpha bet is entertainingly told by W." T. Whitaker, president of the Orphans home at Mryor Creek, L. I. He is 'a. ' Cherokee himself, and says that When his people occupied a large part of" North Carolina, Georgia and Tennes see, here was in the tribe one buck who was regarded as especially dull and lazy. "His name," says Whitaker,. "was Se-qua-ynh, and he took no pleas--ure In the chase for game, seldom had his bow and arrow, the war whoop had no fascination for him, and he re fused to take part in the dances which thrilled the hearts of' the braves. Se-qua-yah was good-natured and kind, but. always wore the look of one burdened with some deep and hidden sorrow, pre ferring nt all times to be alone in the woods when not assisting his frquaw around the wigwam; something In dians nre seldom found doing. The pe culiar actions of the Indian could not be understood by his fellows, and finally he came to be regarded as men tally off balance as an Indian would say: 'Head heap go round.' My and by there came to Se-qua-yah's wild home a little girl babe, and there shone a new light' in the queer Indian's eyca upon her advent. The little one was. named Oo-he-chae, which means 'has. arrived, or been given.' As the child grew the father became more and more devoted and would spend hours with her in the woods, returning to the wig wam only when the face of the Great Spirit, as the- called the sun, had gone down behind the mountains, now called the Mine Midge; perhaps the most beau--tif ill, picturesque mountain range in tlie southern states. Se-qua-yah was not idle, while spending his days in the woods. While listening to the prattle of his child, the notes of the feathered songsters and the barking of the squir rels as they scurried from limb to limb and tree to tree, the mind of the In dian was solving a problem which none of his people had ever been able to solve., and which was to lift them from ignorance to intelligence and Chris--tianity. "Years rolled by, and still Se-qua-yah' was in the woods cutting queer-looking characters on pieces of bark stripped-from- poplar trees. As each character was fashioned he would sit down and teach Oo-he-chae, who had grown to be an Indian maiden of perhaps 14 years, how to pronounce it. She was-. an apt pupil and took great pleasure in the work her father was prosecuting. When S7 characters had been cut on as many different pieces of bark Se--qua-yah declared hi work finished and told Oo-he-chae that they would talk 'with mouth open.' It was not long before the two could put words and sentences together by cutting tlie char acters on large pieces of bark, and then Se-qua-yah told the braves what ho could do. This they doubted, and. when Se-qua-yah would sit on a large-. rock many miles away from Oo-he-chae-' a doubting Indian would carry mes- INDIAN WOMAN AND GIRL. sages cut on a piece of bark, which she would read, and, having been taught ta make the characters, she would send one in reply. For many moons hun dreds of Indians gathered to see this wonderful wort;, and the father anil daughter, were at first regarded as evil .spirits who had been sent to break up the peace and happiness of the red men. This idea or belief, however,, finally died out, and other Indians were taught to "read and write.' Whcp.it became common Se-qua-ynh conceived the idea of publishing a newspaper',, which he eventually, did, calling it the-Oo-luli-hee Sali-uah-liee, meaning tu Kuglish the Cherokee I'hounix reviv ing or taking a new start. Like a ma jority of newspaper enterprises this, one proved a failure and publication was suspended, probably tvjam a luck of advertising .patronage. However,, after the Cherokees were tramped over-' tlie dirt road to their present nation the paper was revived under the name, of. the Cherokee Advocate, a seveu eoltimn; four-page paper, which was af fir,st printed all Cherokee, but which, now' conies out half Kuglish." . Mr. Whituker says the paper .has a splendid eirciilation.-and.is o fit en calle'd-Se-qua-yah's paper. "These facts oau not be disputed," says Mr.. Whitaker.. "and there'nre hundreds of Cherokees. living to-'dhy. who remember old man. Se-qna-yah, whose Knglish nmn'e was Guess. This was his given name, for an Indian -full-blood has no surname . . .. .'SMITH D. FRY. . 1 r :y :